n.so pki: A..rx ; .ijrcjf.. VOL. XXI. LOUISBURGj N, C,, VMAY 6, With' Malice toward none; With Charity for 'all. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. Sr Gov't Report. -' ' WHAT ( IS IT H AS IT I CAN IT DON DO e9 WORIiD'S.FAIR. Office of Boabd of Ageicctltuee, Januarr 1892. The Board of Agriculture has un dertaken to make an exhibit of the TUo original and only penvnne Compound Ox y ?i':j Treatment, that, of Drs. Starkey & I'iiicn is a scientific adjustment of th ele rtf iWvn mid itrnwii m:)trnptiiiil: Sln i the Vomponnd is ro condensed and , resources of the State of North Car- m- portable" that it is sent Jl over the j oina at the Columbian Exposition, it lias been in nfi for over twenty years; and has appointed the World's Fair 111 iusands of intients have been treated, -i-. i , . . , u, 1 over one thonsand physicians have Executive Committee to carry out vis:-l it aid recomm 'iideiHt a very siguifi- this purpose. This Commit toe ap- ,"''r(!:n'jtonnd Oxvn-Its Mo le of Action peals to the citizens of the State to nn 1 :u ks. - is the title of a book of 200 give them a cordial support, and to pa-w. pabhshftd by Drs Starker & Palen, n. . . , . - whic'.i trves to all inquirers full information i aid them m furnishing an exhibit ,s to vl-.is remarkable curat.ve affrnt an 1 a : that WM he illustrative of the State's THE OLD NORTH STATE. iro'id record of surnrisiri: cares in a wid vane of chronic oas.'8 -many of them after bein abandoned to die by other physi cians. Will be mailed free to any address on application. Dt. STAUKRY & PALEN, 152 Arch Street, Philadelphia. Pa. 120 Hatter Street, San Francisco, Cal. Please mention this paper. Coffins an! Caskets. We have added largely to our stock, and now carry a full line of these goods from the plainest wood coffin to the finest plush or velvet covered casket. Also a .full line of coffin hardware, lin ings, trimmings, &c. All of which wi'l be sold at reasonable prices. Respectfully, R. R. Harris & Co. Louisburg, N. C. DAVIS" For Keeping the "Different ..rands, amount of the 'same, price per ton, in money or cotton. JuStMaoi for all Fertilizer Sellers. FOR SALE BY S- Gh DAVIS, FRANKLIXTON, N. C. Price $2.25 per book. Express prepaid if 'you state where you saw this advertisement. resources of every kind. We confidently expect that North Carolina will be able to sustain her self in high competition with the rest of the world. Every country in the world and and every State in the Union is ex pected t o participate at -this display of the world's resources and pro gress in every department of the human effort. It will give some idea of the extent of this Exposition when it is remembered that 750 acres, morethana great plantation, is embraced in the grounds, and that 150 acres will be covered with the necessary buildings. These buildings will be filled with every conceivable product of nature and art, and North Carolina .can and will respond to what is expected of her. In order that our State may take her proper place at this great Expo sition, the Boar J intends to make collectionsin the following depart ments: Agriculture Food and food pro ducts, etc. Horticulture Fruts wines, and garden products, etc. Live Stock Domestic and wild ani mals. Mines, Mining and Metallurgy Minerals, building and monument al stones. Foresty Timbers and forestry product. Fine Arts Paint ing, decoration, etc. Ethnology Indian relics, and specimens illustra ting the progress of labor and inven tion. Liberal Arts Education, engineerings etc. Manufacturers: Fish and Fisheries Fish products and appliances for catching fish. All correspondence to be sent to T. K. Burner, ; Commissioner in cuarge of exhibits and Secretary of the Committee, at Raleigh, N.C. W. F. Greex, Chairman. J. F. Payne, A. Leazar, W. E. Stevens, S. L. Patterson, Committee. News from all Over -the State Gath ered from our Exchanges. Fayetteville will have free mail delivery. Salisbury is to have a new opera house. Union county is to have a new jail to cost 12,000. A sanatorium to cost $15,000 is to be established at Asheville. i The ice factory at - Durham is very nearly ready for business. A Kecly institute will be open ed at Goldsboro at an early day. The new chapel at the Thomp son orphanage has been completed. It is said that Senator Vance will spend the month of May at Beaufort. Rocky River Springs, Stanley county, will be made a fine sum mer resort. . Mecklenburg county Alliance refused to endorse the St. Louis platform. A contract has been made for a cotton factory at Durham to cost $500,000. The Odd Fellows will publish a semi-weekly paper to be called the Heart and Hand. R. A. Doughton, Speaker of the last House, is mentioned for Lieu tenant Gevernor. The annual convention of Kind's Daughters will be held at Wil mington May 18-20. . The new hotel at Hendersonville containing 200 rooms will-be open ed some time in June. Hail did considerable damage in Edgecomb county to gardens and tobacco plants. Dr. John S. Long, of Newberne, will deliver the memorial ad dress on the 10th of May at Fay etteville. Fayetteville Presbytery passed a resolution disapproving the opening of the World's Fair on Sundays. The electric railway of Wil mington has purchased the Graf flin lands at Hilton and will have a park there. ly 10,000 feet high and at least 4000 feet above the near range. Only on rare occasions have these peaks been ascended and but lit tle was known of their topography. Some weeks ago a party of tour-! iste determined to make the as cent and divided into two parties, one for each peak. They, too, took apparatus for signaling-, and expected to have pleasure and amusement byflashing the helio graph code across the intervening space, to the mystification -i.of the people of the valley. The ascent was-made, and while the people were making arrange ments to signal across one of the party on the north mountain was surprised to hear voices which ap parently came from tho air. He moved about and the sound was no longer heard. By changing his position several times he dis covered that at a certain spot on the mountain he could hear the voices, and it was not long before he found that they proceeded from the party on the other moun tain. He called the attention of the others to the phenomena and then they attracted the party on the south mountain and found that an ordinary conversation in an ordi nary tone of voice was plainly heard from one mountain top to the other. There was only one place on each mountain where it could be heard and it appeared to be a natural telephone. No shout ing was necessary and the words were perfectly- distinct. WorH's Pair NotCB. Duels la North Carolina. Applications for space in the Exposition buildings now aggre gate more than 4,000,000 square feet, a little over one-third being from foreign applicants. Great Britain has added 3o, 000 to ils World's Fair appropria tion, making it now 60,000 or approximately $300,000. Victoria, Australia, has made a World's Fair appropriation of $100,000. Arguments for and against Sunday opening of the Exposi tion will bo heard by the Nation al Commission on October G. A young lad, eon of tho editor of the Florida Standard, is mak ing, for exhibition at the Fair, a table upon which appears an in laid map of the state, each coun ty being accurately represented by a separate piece of native Florida wood. In the? California building will be shown a growing specimen of nrv California domestic tlowor The'New York World in an ar- j tide of some length reviewing famous duels which hav tn fought in America says of North Carolina: North Carolina has bn tho scene of many fatal duel, and it has always been regarded as a perfectly safe place to fight to far as tho law is concerned. Among tb" duels that have lon fought in that State only a few of the most prominent ones can bo mentioned here. John Stanly fought with Rich ard Dobbs Spaight, Sr. Uhind the Masonic Hall in Newborn, on Sunday afternoon, Sptemh-r 1S02. At th second fir a bullet picrcd tho coat collar of Stanly ; at the fourth, Spaight received a Wyoming U th only Stat that pnya its U-nrhor epml!y without rvgnrd to Electric 1'ittrr. TbU fyradj i Strain- ". rll known a 3-1 m p- jUr a i o rcUI tnati.b. All !.. . c"-d KWtrie HiiJer !n,f tLs tr mut.g f j nt. A j-irvf lii.-'Iw-tJi diri b4 ri. itaui it U piarant--i t d all that U cUiir,-i. htr'.r; LHtrr w.ll CUt all tli-j3 if ttr birr at'! kk!t.jm,Ul t. nun 9 pirapl-, bti, m! rU-cra ot hrr Jir K n m ul t j in?j cr L! Will drr c:lri f r -in t L- j?rt act rvtrnt ti !! t ct- .ill mLrtjl tVser. Fur tit T '-a. '.- i i lion r4 ln.Ii4ft-fti-.atrT Llir-:ri J'.ttirn. Knfir iaif tciion rru;.i. r m-m- rj refn'J-t. lrici ICr. ixl Uttl at Tbocu & ArcWi dru, lure. Thr? ni not a rinU nTTft fr drutikcnDj in th Mw.thia.1 hist vir. Wi!l jfn b 1 th-wurticr. Tl.- wound in the r.ght of which j tLt ia-r i-rr:i !'atV.uQia(tT. he diil in twentv-thr hours. ! r"a,,.'f r" n ra r 1 iu'ci Min;u i' no rrvK The chalU-ng" was jnt and ac cepted and the duel fought on ana d nothing t-r it. V.' ko-i frv-rn th' samo day, GOJ people it- j plain ar r.r iha nul.ko t-i Iir-B.in2 it. !P- ,H lt. .- w. It Mnn at I 'of lit- rriun at wiln r..-rti In 112, on th Virginia lin. Mutbrsd. t.... t-itb.nt ir. Tb limn .1 !sffli,lrv- w a a r, t Ilnrv. i ittfk. Iiiurk. a&! T r.Jr. r'r ti.-- I t Tlj"rvA w .At. Franklin: n. obtainable, and also paiutiug. iu wator and oil, of 00(3 wild flow- 1 ,jie first firo vv i.0is I) ers anu graces. i This thiel aro. from a disi.u. in regard to th qutioti who. A man ..n-i:. or of?;x- nlnau appear all the rMicc, which art wa? the partner of a certain lady ; f.ir.riew hni.-v- If invitJ to U aciUi.!i obtainable, of various Arctic ex- ! in a danc at a party given by : .lat-. plormg expeditions. Judge Gaston. Jarvis Clifton and Prntice j lH-prLa mml l.lirr utn4alaf. 1 I it n t wrtb ih r.-a'.l t r r 75 Law fought at Cro, orj th lir.o : o"3 t f f'urw.f , f nrj jdym 4 ih'-w lir r- .raja-nu, 15 t GooJIioaJs as A Gos)tfl. There is no subject of local in terest which more vitally concerns, the people of North Carolina than of good roads. It wouM bo dim cult to estimato the value of lnit. proved public highways to the far mers of tho State. It would be so The Dead wood Board of Trad" is arranging to make a ptecial Black Hills exhibit at the Kxk- j b-twoen (talcs county. North Car- ; l!iiik caU a: t.,.r ,.ry..ai , .,. sition. ' olina, and Southampton county, l- f hil WaSu-r. irj N.t: The American Bible Society 1 lrSn,lft " or 1 - 'v,v crti.-wlr aid if tt !.- r i ti-Ui. r.ill make an exhibit in which ua? a Nor,hf r:i n'atl h , ,r?h- rVY?T w.m.m h . imu.vs . , 1,0 -lif!o:i n a n-itivo of more than 20J ditTer'iit lan guagos B.rtir county. Thy fought .wr T!m .r! 1 v pr- luci: g l.':tK).txv a Mrs. Blanchard. Law s'ru :k N)ua-h i.l till a ) v..r. T- 1 1 1 1 irv"r.-k i his antagonist and in t-ultig 1 Kentucky has made a $100,000 , ,, , , , , Ttt ... .- , 1 the clothing from tb- wound Ih'' U orld s 1 air annropriat iod. . ,. . . pproj Tlif French Chamber of Depu ties approved by a unaniaious vV th cr-dit-ask-d by 1 1 .- gov ernment to be expended for th Trench exhibit at thet-xpo.it ion. great that their actual cost would The appropriation amounts to be insignificant by compariso 1. $075,500. The present condition of the ! - ; country roads is amazing when we consider the progress of civiliza- IIow to IYcscrve Irish Potatoes. ball cam with it. Clifton aftcr- wnrJi iunrri-d Mr, lllanchar 1 and fh did iu a, year. In 1S12 Lieiiti-natit Sninu"l II. Bryant, I'nitcd States Army. wa killed in a du I in Nor'h Caroli- na. In 1344 William K. Loud.- ! not fought two du'ds with Mont- , gomcrv Hunt, within a few d.nv) Iluilklrn' AriiUa ?vlp. Tl. l-'. Ar- ia th m r 1 1 f r -, t.-t:.r. ch.,pi.-.l b2-t. rti!. rrc, anl a. I ki r-3ptfc'M, a rvl anT-.! : frr. p . r ! i-1, i . V- r : lr I'ri & Avc'.car. Ttn M. wo:.- llf.;.c in Kentucky h.i. ove r 2" t !i,i.'r n undr itarnn It S!i.-.iM IV la Kivijt Kcuv. tion in other directions. It is on- iiOa BOUQUETS, DESIGNS, ETC. Fine Cut Flowers in Great Vari ety. Bouquets, Baskets , and Designs tastefully arranged. Pampas Plumes, Magnolias and Sugar and Silver Maple, Horse Chestnut and other shade trees. Early cabbage and tomato plants at the right season. Orders promptly filled and sat isfaction guaranteed. H. STEINMITZ, Florist, Raleigh, N. C. NOTICE. lliivnig qualified as Administrator of Ke 1) m c;i Green, deceased, all parsons indebted to Wr nutate are requested to pay the same once, and all persona holding claims "riiiiiKt hor estate will present for payment "ii or before March;il, 1893, or this notice " ill lie piead in bar of their recovery. 1 his March 7, 1892. John Geees, Admr. ly in the matter of highways that It is said that a million and a the people of North Carolina have half dollars will be put into build- made no advance from the pioneer ings at Winston-Salem this year, period. If improvements in other ot each other. J l.o t:rst was on 1 j p, v.'il n. ? f.ir f., H.rj tho Island of J.iva1 mere t. ith. r hr " " v l- t t , . , . . . lr. K:i-k N i'l--'ft ( t L'.'tafl. was hurt ; th f. con I at Sa.gr.- , ti..n r j,, snt e ... tjB. ,t cr1 , porr wh'To Hunt r. wounded ' Scribner's Magaziue. Scientific American Agency for . CAVEATS, DESIGN PATENTS COPYRIGHTS, etc on ana free Handbook write to Mi kn nZa SI? i10 Hanaooo write to- rpr secarintt Datents In America. tbe pibUe h Jo1"?? out by na U brought before putuc by a notice given free o charge in the wntific ttteKWHH yer- Siii6 w'thit Weekly. S3.0 AN EXCEPTIONAL YEAR. The year 1891 has been marked by a greater advance than any similar period since the Magazine was established. Not only has the Hterary and artistic excellence been maintained and increased, but a corrp sponding gain has been made in the sal' and influence of the Magazine. At the end of 1891 the circulation had risen to more than 140,000 It may justly be promised that the further improvements during the coming year will be proportionate to these largely increased opportunities. FOE NEXT YEAS. It ia not poesible to give, in a brief space. an acconnt of all the features in prepara tion, bnt tne material is denweiit iu neither importance nor range of subject. THE POOR I THE WOHLD'S GBEAT CITIES. It is proposed to publish a series of arti cles, upon a scale not before attempted, giv-"t ing tne results 01 special study and work among the poor of the great eities. The plan will include an account of tne condr tions of life in those cities (iu many lands) where the results of research will be helpful for purposes of comparison as well as for their own intrinsic interest. While, from a scieutiOc point of view, the articles will be a contribution of great importance, thetreat ment will be thoroughly popular, and the elaborate illustrations wiil serve to make the presentation of the subject vivid as well as picturesque. WASHINGTON ALLSTON. Unpublished reminiscences and letters of this foremost among early American paint ers. A number of illustrations will lend ad ditional interest to the articles. ' IMPORTANT MOMENTS. The aim of this series of very short arti cles is to descrile the signal occasions when some decisive event took "plaw, or when some great experiment woa shown to be successful such moments s that of the first use of the Atlantic :able, the first use of the teleerauh and telephone, jhe nrstsnc ces8ful experiment with ether, the night of the Chicago fire, the scene at the moment of tBe vote on the impeachment of Andrew Johnson, etc. - , . ' ' ' Oirr OF DOOB FAFERS. " . In the early spring will be begun a num ber of seasonable articles among them -being:. Small country place, how to lay out and beautify them, by Samuel Parsons. Jr. Fishing Lore from on. Angler's Note-Book by Dr. Lerpy M. .Yale. " Mountain Station Life in New Zealand, by Sid ney, Dickinson. Racings in Australia, by Sidney Dickinson, with illustrations by Birge Harrison. The illustrations are made from original mate rial. Price 25 cents. f3.06 a year. CIIAS. SCRIBNER'S SONS, Publishers," . 743 and 745 Broadway, New York. The Rockingham Rocket reports a farmer who made $2,000 clear profit this season on a medium size farm. Ilinton Reams, aprominent citi zen of Granville county, commited suicide last week at the age of 83 years. A colored woman and two chil- aren were nurnea 10 aeatn in Sampson county last week while asleeplin a cabin. respects had depended on better still be struggling helplessly amid semi- barbaric environments. As it is, the time has arrived when the roads must he improved. In the agitation of tho move ment looking to the establishment of good country roads there is a governorship for the man who will courageously take control of it and intelligently direct it. There is no division of opinion on the main The difficulty of keeping Irish potatoes in edible condition aftr 1 -ill ...- fiT-r.iieTiHn.fii..iir.ivi.in:..iir.-!i . . . ....... ....... v.. ... ...... ....... uuiii- 1 1 nil 1 'rr in I'Myi .! "I l.r.r.. em housekeepers, farmer and I 1,1 tl,e ,hih atlL S'H',,1!'1 firf- . L-n ari.. f"!.-r r ir.,-t . ani .t-r' 5 merchants. Prof. Schribaux, of Tho.v afterward., l cimo warm ; Ul J-r f the National College of Aprieult- " --a- , , . . ,. . i . t . 1 . . t . . ana was lost at sa. liouaumr i-"n .,-.!..., u- - was really th inventor ot !h-,Trvjt. Kx. ir-.i i.:.l- . Tl.-nt. ft The Rev. W. C. Tyree, of Louis- question. Everybody agrees that better roads are an absolute neces sity. "When methods of securing them are suggested there are dif ferences of judgment. The man .who will 'suggest a ville, has accepted a call to the pastorate of the First Babtis church at Durham. Descendants of the Cherokee In dians claim more than half of Guilford county; including the method wTiich is practical and is town of Greensboro. The Van Lindley company has 50,000 peach trees at Sonthern Pines and will have 1,000 acres in orchards there. The Presbyterian Orphans'Home recently burned at Barium Springs, likely to be successful can make it succeed by a determined and earn est advocacy of it. In order to ac complish his purpose it may be necessary for him to canvass the State and make public addresses on the subject. . It may even be necessary for him to carry it into Natural Telephone. will be rebuilt and completed by poiitics and if ue i3 ambitions for September 1. office it is in tllis d;r6Ction he will find his reward. What better platform could a candidate for gov ernor desire"than one which de A gentleman from Minnesota, manded better conntrv roads ? . .. . .1 -i ii anout iweniy-nve miies somnwesi Enonck has-been written and of Rapid City, South Dakota, tells snokenon the Doint that cood K "I" 1 I 01 a aiscovery wnicu was acciuen- d desirable.. What is now tally mado in the mountains north needed ia for BOme one to propose west of that town a few weeks a feasible plan for obtaining ago. According to tne story tola, them. there is a natural telephone line between two mountains in the To show the growth of the in- Black Hills range. dnstry of furnishing knitting wool, On each side of an intervening it is only necessary, maintains the valley, twelve miles in width; New York Commercial Advertiser, stand two high peaks which tow- to point-out the favct that in Penn er above the other mountains and gylvania a single factory tarns out have long been : known as land- 5,000,000 bundles a month. marks, being called .-the "twin peaks. 'These mountains are fui- Children Cry for Pitcher's Ccstcrfc ure of France, has recently de vised a very simple, cheap and successful method by which he has been able to preserve potatoes in the edible condition for over a year and a half. This process has beeu adopted by the French Government for preserving pota toes for the arm). The French Minister of Agriculture publishes he details of tho process in the official "Bulletin du Miniatere de V Agricultural" for March, 1S92. The following is a trans lation of the essential part of the scheme : 1. Tho method of presorving consists in plunging the tubers. before storing them away, for ten hours into a two per cent, solu tion of commercial sulphuric ac id to one hundred pans of water, i 2. The acid penetrates the eyes to the depth of about one-fortieth inch (two millimeters), which serves to destroy their sprouting power, it does not have any ap preciable effect upon tho skin of the potatoes. 3. After remaining in the liq uid ten hours, the tncers mu?t be thoroughly dried before storing awoy. 4. The same liquid may b used any nuralicr of times with equal good results. 5. A barrel or tank of anv kind will do for the- treatment. The acid is so diluted it does not affect the wood. G. Chemical analysis shows that potatoes treated by this pro cess are as nutritotfs and health ful after eighteen mouths as when fresh dug.. - -.' j 7. Potatoes thus treated are, of course, worthless for. pi ant ing. GeraldMcCarthy, North' Caro lina Experimect'Statioiu t Harper's Magazine.. ILLt'.TIt ATLU. p reseii t, signal service y t n j -V1 and died near Pitlstxms N. C.' in ino spring o: i'j. The half-way hous, where t Dismal Swamp Canal crosses rsorlh Carolina line into ir-l ginia, has beeu the scent of two! duels. The first took place on , rb u-t - :' t:i r t! fr: r.r. the irginia l.ne duru.g t h au-1 ... Jt7. ii.r,u4,a .m k. finltV tutnn of 1847, when II. F. Harris fell iu a dul with Kdward C. Yellowly. The scond on June 12, XRG8, wb-n Iiolx-rt W. Hughes, of the Richmond State Journal, fought William K. Cam eron, of the Richmond Index, .l !.;...! J l'; "owl- miJ rortrlTct r-. ii mi I'liiiwis, uiki nnuuuu J l u ftor L "A nnit in the breast at tho first fire. Maurice, the son of Judge Al fred Moore, of the United States Supreme Court, fought with Bn jaman Smith, afterwards Govern or of North Carolina, in 1S00 or 1801, on the South Caroliua line with pistols, roc3u?e of an al leged insult to Moore's father. Smith was badly wounded in the side. Smith was engaged iu oth er du li if K-rl U;frui-l Ik . UiTlofi jr I'onniirj. tm ! ti jr iB 1 Ur a.1 W . .t. l'rti lr ill nta nW., i fifnU) UrtmtU: CiMiu( AnwrVM I!.. ..ry. 1 f n-W of Ih fx f T qr jvj n H'u t - m J- rt.-l In rw r- A r o l'- j fciitr lfW inl C li UliS-f. iiu.. lrll 1,7 Mr XiWl m4 A!fri fv-r... Artl U i wl l g 00 !lw o r-a . A utfrttn n 1 lulUa Arrak.. Julru I T. IbititTiip rhilw fh. f4t . . Hi..-.. u "i "I'll s. w r . a will If .. in 4)!ltxT n Al.ri h. H M lwk. A C.. Ik-jl-. Hrxr I t lan. iu Ltm A oiao. u ca r lv'Oi .r ril r, Aia h nt'-rttf fia vfTI lriMi4 r-ic U.ta rn. t cf ,tlk Ukl H U.alaorv. I f t. rtnl g rl m frif t.f. k( lr Twl. i. BrVlr t a r-rmvl lln-wt ..f b Kjv. IrgK I f Ac iv TJm. lr KiU U-r. IJAtirKU S PERIODICA UL rrt Tut; 4rci'i .lJ't irr' run Miarra'o ntit i Rilriia r auric I 0 4 I i- 4 N 11 tu MaIictI L - T7 Totafa nt (I X7eVlr brtr't 1 jlh ihc C o m S. r for Jia rl tVrriUr ""7 rXttt at fe I of rrh tfif. H Km n.j t:fe i (.. r:. u Ijfc rool titrtcar ml-wnplivoi U.i aHi llir coiS., Itnn.l m.1 If.. ... M 1 f?ICJZ". J lorihrretraral.if.traie?iliHiJ w ... . wj auaia. -n-rai I rt J tr vloar. I Mb fji, r bikJm(, rr I nrn-l.t l.ia 1. iu4 a;j. lrd?4 lo ll.rpr' Ua!f .Ipk.lM... c-1. Aoaljtic;!, and el I'd. U-r nl,k. I t 7i, lacIM. frM Jn lJOf toJalT -oc iwl., Sio, ri'.:l i4 m lnilUBCf ! ht ana! hj ri ffic tooncr t-rJn or.tlraft, l ar,4 clui .ic r (!. 2Ctsjtp't crt no! to ct?jtV ht tij(JMTMt Kiih-mt C fjpr'tst :4r a) AJJ rtM . . . . rrnzxj LITtrett dlfcatca raj . Xoii. Ttk-y all Li to tba ux4 fcerlnain l'ia XcFitl Lrcr cr lnta tlorxL Ard dry &3 hzr th cztm uxt- Ujrrrix, l&U.-T!f-titjo I.;l'jtjrv; tbo rrx cj:lncle Kiia ao-1 r.,j LAca, Ecacca tnxl tladrcd aiirnta; t wtrtX ftnra at GcnCzltt t very t lood-tait tal diuarlcr, ro maiwr bow it ouuo aU ax'4 cxirtvi by it. 1: tbo only mcdH for mil mch d'j euv tat"a bo poi3Hy ccrUUa ta it tSccti that il can. be ffanxxJcd. If tt foils to LeorCfe or euro, la any csae, Cm money it rcftmJod. ICoOue d caa L Myast aa jpM." . JU teab do ooo nlio uccJa Lc-jl . IUaraJI Pavrrrv.7VTnHt. Xotlce. - I hrnbf n all rrav-oa'frva lilrLn j or harbrriaT Vb W.r.4aMJ. m J bare cuatractfer LU libor aatUO- . Jojun Hart

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